The human body inhabits a complex consortium of different microbes which together form the microbiota. Virtually every surface of the human body is colonized by a distinct microbiota, forming complex communities. An increasing number of research results indicates that changes in the microbiota can have vast effects on the health of its host. Most studies investigating the microbiota were conducted on animals, as many interventions and investigations cannot be performed on humans due to ethical considerations. This raises the question if findings from experimental studies are translational and can benefit patients. That becomes especially apparent when trying to dissect molecular mechanisms involved in this fine-tuned interplay between nutrients, the microbiota, and its host. By establishing human organoid cultures from the large and small intestine that can be exposed to microbes and/or microbial products with subsequent transcriptomic, epigenetic and immunological analysis, the investigators aim to generate findings with high translational potential with new insights into the complex interaction of the microbiota, the host and its immune system.
* Data obtained from participants will be recorded in the database Redcap to ensure high-quality data recording * Establishment of human organoid cultures are standardized by published protocols (Pleguezuelos-Manzano et al. 2020)
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
100
Inselspital, University Hospital Bern
Bern, Switzerland
RECRUITINGAssessment of changes in the transcriptomic profile of epithelial cells before and after organoid culture
Assessment of changes in the transcriptomic profile of epithelial cells before and after organoid culture is established by RNA-sequencing and quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR)
Time frame: 3 Years
Assessment of changes in the epigenome of epithelial cells before and after organoid culture
Assessment of changes in the epigenome of epithelial cells before and after organoid culture is established by whole genome bisulphite sequencing and chromatin immunoprecipitation sequencing
Time frame: 3 Years
Transcriptomic and Epigenomic Landscape of host-microbiota Interaction
Determining effects of microbial-derived metabolites on the transcriptomic and epigenomic landscape of human organoids treated with the respective metabolite
Time frame: 3 Years
Host-Microbiota interaction - Stem cell maintenance and Cell Differentiation
Determining effects of microbial-derived metabolites on epithelial cell differentiation and stem cell maintenance
Time frame: 3 Years
3D-to-2D Transwell System
Establishing a method to transform human organoid culture into a 2-dimensional trans-well system which allows transportation studies, characterization of epithelial integrity and other downstream analysis
Time frame: 3 Years
Gut-on-a-chip
Applying 2-dimensional trans-well system to a gut-on-a-chip set-up in collaboration with the Artorg Center at the University of Bern
Time frame: 3 Years
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